Gabrielle Douglas, who walked away with the gymnastic gold at the London Olympics, is out with her first book: "Grace, Gold & Glory: My Leap of Faith." Douglas, who turns 17 on New Year's Eve, talked with Religion News Service about her prayer life, her love of matzo ball soup and overcoming homesickness to make it to the Olympics.

Q: Everyone knows you as a gold medal Olympic gymnast, but how do you define yourself as a young woman of faith?

A: Faith plays a very big role in my life. I don't know where I would be without it today. I've always been praying for everything. And my mom always exposed me and my siblings to being a Christian and the Bible. I was watching back, and looking at the Olympics, and my mouth is moving - and that's me praying.

Q: How did your faith get you through preparing for difficult gymnastic maneuvers like the uneven bars?

A: The Scriptures motivate me, and I use them to help me overcome circumstances like practices and competitions. If I'm having trouble with a skill: "I can do all things in Christ that strengthens me." Or sometimes I get a little nervous: "Do not fear; always believe."

Q: You saw rain on the day of the all-around competition, and said you saw it as a good sign from God. Why?

A: My mom told me that it's God's manifestation ready to happen and great things are going to happen. Before the all-around finals, I had a peace in my heart, and it was raining, and I texted my mom and said, "Mom, it's raining. You know what that means." And she said, "Yes, I do."

Q: You wrote that your family celebrated Hanukkah when you were 9 and that it has observed the Sabbath and you've enjoyed your mother's matzo ball soup. Are you doing anything to mark Hanukkah this year?

A: No, I am not. But I really love matzo ball soup, and I just had matzo ball soup recently, and it's just one of my favorite Jewish meals.

Q: Are you going back to church as an Olympic champion or an average churchgoer?

A: When I go back in church, I'm just going to be that same old Gabby Douglas - just praise and worship and listening to the pastor preach. So, it's not going to be any different.

Q: You lived with a church-going host family in Iowa. How did that come about?

A: God laid it on Travis (Parton), my host family dad. He was thinking about hosting a gymnast, and he wrote to (coach Liang) Chow and said "Chow, If there's anyone that needs a break and they want to achieve their dreams, I'm opening up my house." And a month later I arrived, and Chow came back to Travis and said, "Well, is that offer still open?" and Travis said yes. It was definitely God's working.

Q: You spent close to two years living far from your family to train for the Olympics. You called it your leap of faith, but you almost gave up on it. Why?

A: My mom and my siblings came to Iowa to celebrate Christmas with me. It went by so fast, and they were ready to go home and pack up and leave, and I was wanting to go home. I hadn't been home for a while. I wanted to quit and leave the sport just because I was homesick.

Q: How did you overcome that?

A: My mom and my brother sat me down. They told me to keep fighting and keep pushing. They didn't want me to come home as a quitter, but they wanted me to come home as a champion. They also said they didn't want me to come home and watch the Olympics on the TV and say I wish I would have gone there. They didn't want me to have regret, and they knew that I couldn't live with myself if I didn't make the team. So I went back to the gym, and I was just determined to push myself.

Q: You've also faced personal criticism - from a former coach who thought you needed a nose job to people who questioned your hairstyle during the Olympics. How did you handle that?

A: The whole hair thing I don't really focus on because I was at the Olympics. I was the first African-American to win the gold medal in all-around so I focused on that. The whole bullying part - nobody likes to be made fun of. It was very hard to overcome that, and I was very hurt. Now I have a forgiving heart. I forgive them, and I move on.